Mary Jo Pehl

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Mary Jo Pehl (pronounced Peel) portrayed the sinister Mrs. Pearl Forrester, the late Dr. Forrester's mother, on "Mystery Science Theater 3000," as well as serving as one of the show's writers. From Season 7 through the end of the show's run, Pearl was the evil force behind a wicked experiment forcing Mike and the 'bots to watch the cheesiest movies of all time while captive in space aboard the Satellite of Love.

Contents

Biography

After pursuing a career in nursing, Pehl realized that she had made a "major bad career choice" and began pursuing a career in comedy.

Growing up in a family of five siblings in Circle Pines, Minnesota, provided Pehl with plenty of comedy fodder. She performed standup all around the Midwest from 1987 through 1991. She also worked for the Norrell Temporary Agency, where she earned the title of Temp of the Month for March 1990. She has been featured on VH-1's "Stand-Up Spotlight" and A & E's "Comedy on the Road."

In February 1992, Pehl joined the MST3K writing team after meeting Mike Nelson and Paul Chaplin on the comedy circuit in Minneapolis. She was drawn to the series partly because of her perverse fascination with really bad movies and partly because of the "ineptitude of the people who make them." [with minor editing] She is the only cast member from the series to actually sing in the theme; other actors were lip-syncing to the singer.

In fall of 2014, Pehl appeared in the DVD-music video comedy short The Frank along with other MST3k members.

At 2016's San Diego Comic-Con, it was announced that Mary Jo Pehl would reprise her role of Pearl Forrester for an appearance on the revived Mystery Science Theater 3000. It was also announced that she would contribute to the writing of several episodes as well.

Personal quotes

"The atmosphere in the writers’ room was cacophonous. There was no pausing to say, “Let me add to that joke.” And the typist had to transcribe everything that he or she could catch. Sometimes we’d be stopped on a frame for a good 10, 15 minutes because there were so many jokes."

"That considerably reduced our movie pool. And they were also more attentive when it came to reviewing the scripts. They went through them for standards and practices. Somebody objected to our using the word putz."

"Around 2001, I went to a movie theater, and two people in front of me were talking. And the person in front of them turned around and asked them to shut up, and said, “This isn’t Mystery Science Theater, you know.” That was the first taste I got of the show’s lasting effect."

"The idea of riffing, of mocking, of commenting on things is very prevalent nowadays. Obviously, it was happening before Mystery Science Theater codified it. But it just seems to have pervaded a lot of the way comedy is done now—it’s its own genre now. The one thing that I do find a little disheartening—and I don’t know if we started the ball rolling on this—is that nothing is sacred anymore."